Abstract

Each cell type responds uniquely to stress and fractionally contributes to global and tissue-specific stress responses. Hepatocytes, liver macrophages (MΦ), and sinusoidal endothelial cells (SEC) play functionally important and interdependent roles in adaptive processes such as obesity and tumor growth. Although these cell types demonstrate significant phenotypic and functional heterogeneity, their distinctions enabling disease-specific responses remain understudied. We developed a strategy for the simultaneous isolation and quantification of these liver cell types based on antigenic cell surface marker expression. To demonstrate the utility and applicability of this technique, we quantified liver cell-specific responses to high-fat diet (HFD) or diethylnitrosamine (DEN), a liver-specific carcinogen, and found that while there was only a marginal increase in hepatocyte number, MΦ and SEC populations were quantitatively increased. Global gene expression profiling of hepatocytes, MΦ and SEC identified characteristic gene signatures that define each cell type in their distinct physiological or pathological states. Integration of hepatic gene signatures with available human obesity and liver cancer microarray data provides further insight into the cell-specific responses to metabolic or oncogenic stress. Our data reveal unique gene expression patterns that serve as molecular "fingerprints" for the cell-centric responses to pathologic stimuli in the distinct microenvironment of the liver. The technical advance highlighted in this study provides an essential resource for assessing hepatic cell-specific contributions to metabolic and oncogenic stress, information that could unveil previously unappreciated molecular mechanisms for the cellular crosstalk that underlies the continuum from metabolic disruption to obesity and ultimately hepatic cancer.

Highlights

  • The liver coordinately regulates essential aspects of whole-body metabolism, detoxification, and macromolecular synthesis/breakdown

  • Of the numerous cell types in liver, primary cell types: hepatocytes (PH) constitute the majority of the parenchymal fraction (PF), whereas liver-specific MΦ, and sinusoidal endothelial cells (SEC) that line the microvasculature are found in the non-parenchymal fraction (NPF) [1]

  • We have described an antigen-based isolation procedure that enables the simultaneous recovery of three different hepatic cell types with a high degree of purity

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Summary

Introduction

The liver coordinately regulates essential aspects of whole-body metabolism, detoxification, and macromolecular synthesis/breakdown. Each sinusoid traverses a collection of two primary cell types: hepatocytes (PH), which compose the bulk of liver tissue, and Kupffer cells (MΦ) [1] These cell types demonstrate significant phenotypic and functional heterogeneity, their molecular contributions to metabolic stress and hepatic cancer remain understudied. Obesity shares aspects of its clinical epidemiology with hepatocellular cancer (HCC), and is considered to be a predisposing risk factor for this type of hepatic cancer [2,3,4] Both obesity and HCC are characterized by heightened inflammatory responses that perturb hepatocyte function and promote their transformation [2,4,5]. Hypervascularization is a hallmark of HCC, underscoring the role of angiogenesis and altered SEC function during hepatocarcinogenesis [7]

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